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Phi and the TetraGrammaton
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| Hebrew | Letter name | Phonetic Sound |
|---|---|---|
| י | Yud | "Y" |
| ה | Hey | "H" |
| ו | Vov | "V" |
| ה | Hey | "H" |
These four letters are usually transliterated from Hebrew as IHVH in Latin, JHWH in German, French and Dutch, and JHVH/YHWH in English. This has been variously rendered as "Yahweh" or as "Jehovah", based on the Latin form of the term, while the Hebrew text does not clearly indicate the omitted vowels. In English translations, it is often rendered as "the Lord", following Jewish tradition which reads the word as "Adonai" ("Lord") out of respect for the name of God and the interpretation of the commandment not to take the name of God in vain.
The gematria values of the four letters in the Tetragrammaton (Yud - Hey - Vov - Hey) are 10, 5, 6 and 5. This indicates the importance of the number 5 in this Holiest Name of God. Yud has a gematria value of 10. Vov has a gematria value of 6, which creates various ratios within this name of God:
| Hebrew Letters | Ratio | Decimal | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yud / Vov | = | 10 / 6 | = | 1.666 |
| Vov / Yud | = | 6 / 10 | = | 0.600 |
| (Yud + Vov) / ( Hey + Hey) | = | 16 / 10 | = | 1.600 |
| ( Hey + Hey) / (Yud + Vov) | = | 10 / 16 | = | 0.625 |
As Phi and it’s reciprocal phi are 1.618 and 0.618, respectively, we see that this Holy Name of God intrinsically represents a set of ratios that reflect the golden ratio, or the Divine proportion, that we see all throughout His creation.
The Hebrew word for "when they were created" is BeHebaram. This word can be divided to also say "With ‘Hey’ were they created", which suggests the importance of the number five in the creation of mankind.
The Hebrew Bible says that The Holy One created man "in the image" of G-d. The Hebrew word "in the image" is made up of 4 letters - Bet, Tsadi, Lamed, and Mem.
| Hebrew Letters | Value |
|---|---|
| Bet | 2 |
| Tsadi | 90 |
| Lamed | 30 |
| Mem | 40 |
| Total | 162 |
This too creates a close representation of Phi at 1.62 to three decimal places.
Thanks to Yosi Spater
for his contribution of the golden ratio relationships
in the Tetragrammaton and Jewish scriptures about creation,
and to
Wikipedia for other information on this page..
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